Paul B
Premium Member
I have a story about this bridge. This is the Throggs Neck Bridge and behind me in the picture is Fort Totten which was a revolutionary war fort. The historic fort is still there and it is full of cannon emplacements. So we figured we would dive here with an underwater metel detector and find some cannonballs.
We jumped in with SCUBA gear and a buddy line that we always dive with because the visability is only three feet or so. As soon as we submerged, the current took us and dragged us across the rocky bottom. We were tumbling and moving very fast and all tangled up in our buddy line. We finally surfaced about a quarter mile from my boat all cut up.
That was when we were new and stupid divers. That is also how we learned about tides in tidal estuarys.
:eek1:
When a hundred square miles of ocean water move under a bridge, it moves fast.
We did go back during slack tide though and collected 18 dozen of the biggest clams I have ever seen. It is too deep and rough for anyone to clam there so these things get almost like bowling balls. I was in chowder for months. :lol:
We jumped in with SCUBA gear and a buddy line that we always dive with because the visability is only three feet or so. As soon as we submerged, the current took us and dragged us across the rocky bottom. We were tumbling and moving very fast and all tangled up in our buddy line. We finally surfaced about a quarter mile from my boat all cut up.
That was when we were new and stupid divers. That is also how we learned about tides in tidal estuarys.
:eek1:
When a hundred square miles of ocean water move under a bridge, it moves fast.
We did go back during slack tide though and collected 18 dozen of the biggest clams I have ever seen. It is too deep and rough for anyone to clam there so these things get almost like bowling balls. I was in chowder for months. :lol: